Given the lack of fit between gifted students and their
schools, it is not surprising that such students often have little good to say
about their school experiences. In one study of 400 adults who had achieved
distinction in all areas of life, researchers found that three-fifths of these
individuals either did badly in school or were unhappy in school. Few MacArthur
Prize fellows, winners of the MacArthur Award for creative accomplishment, had
good things to say about their precollegiate schooling if they had not been
placed in advanced programs. Anecdotal (名人秩事的) reports support this. Pablo
Picasso, Charles Darwin, Mark Twain, Oliver Goldsmith, and William Butler Yeats
all disliked school. So did Winston Churchill, who almost failed out of Harrow,
an elite British school. About Oliver Goldsmith, one of his teachers remarked,
"Never was so dull a boy." Often these children realize that they know more than
their teachers, and their teachers often feel that these children are arrogant,
inattentive, or unmotivated. Some of these gifted people may
have done poorly in school because their gifts were not scholastic. Maybe we can
account for Picasso in this way. But most fared poorly in school not because
they lacked ability but because they found school unchallenging and consequently
lost interest. Yeats described the lack of fit between his mind and school:
"Because I had found it difficult to attend to anything less interesting than my
own thoughts, I was difficult to teach." As noted earlier, gifted children of
all kinds tend to be strong-willed nonconformists. Nonconformity (不墨守成规) and
stubbornness (and Yeats’s level of arrogance and self-absorption) are likely to
lead to conflicts with teachers. When highly gifted students in
any domain talk about what was important to the development of their abilities,
they are far more likely to mention their families than their schools or
teachers. A writing prodigy (神童) studied by David Feldman and Lynn Goldsmith was
taught far more about writing by his journalist father than his English teacher.
High-IQ children in Australia studied by Miraca Gross had much more positive
feelings about their families than their schools. About half of the
mathematicians studied by Benjamin Bloom had little good to say about school.
They all did well in school and took honors classes when available, and some
skipped grades. Many gifted people attributed their success ______.
A. mainly to parental help and their education at home
B. both to school instruction and to their parents’ coaching
C. more to their parents’ encouragement than to school training
D. less to their systematic education than to their talent